But the flash may have been associated with the momentary outage,maybe a transformer blew up or was struck by lightning,and the momentary blackout was
the time it took the switching system to a clear circuit.
I saw some odd things 2 nights ago,very dim flashes in the sky and on the ground,I was standing outside in the wilderness during a patrol (dont'
ask),I didn't think much about the flash because it was so dim the first time that I saw it, but after 2 or 3 times it made me wonder.
It looked like it may have been reflected or projected from something,so dim it barely registered as being visible,but I saw it three or four
times.
The sky was totally clear and there was a bright,nearly full moon out.

I just sent my report at www.nuforc.org... and I will be sending it to NETI (Norwegian center for the study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence)
also. I was also thinking of contacting EISCAT in Trondheim, where the Norwegian HAARP station is, to see what they have to say about what I saw.

While browsing through the database of reports at www.nuforc.org... I found a report that might be of interest. It's one of the very few
Norwegian reports on the site. The fact that it is from Trondheim also makes it quite interesting.

Walking home from the student community house I had a break at a busstop to smoke a cigarette and reply to a SMS message on my cell-phone. After I had
sent the message a looked up at the sky to see if there was possibillity for snow, I then noticed a light.

The light was blueish white, sort of like xenon car-headlights. It moved rather slowly from southeast to northwest, approx. 3-4 km. to the south of
me. (A guess based on the angel to the light and the apparent cailing of the clouds.) There was no sound, and the route is not an approach channel to
the Vaernes-airport, which anyway have no night flights. (The airport are about 40 km north of the city, and aircraft come from the west or directly
form the south.) The light was neither on an apparent course towards the Oerlandet air force base about 60 km north-north east of the city. The light
did not have the characteristics of posistioning lights on any form of aircraft I've ever seen. The hospital often get ambulance helicopters landing,
but these make a lot of noice and extremely rare this late.

The light kept a steady pace, and I remember being puzzled that the light did not seem to be reflected from the few clouds,as it seemed to be bright
enough to illuminate them. The properties of the light was "cold" like a neon-lamp as opposed to the "warm" light of an ordinary lightbulb. It did
not seem to have any special shape, more like a radiant pinprik or singularity, if you understand me. When it seemed to reach the "Graakallen" hills
(where there's a military radar station) I looked down as my cell-phone suddenly beeped, when I looked up again a half-second later the light was
gone. This seemed to have neccesitated an significant acceleration. The time of the observation, 5 minutes, is based on the fact that my cigarette was
just a stubb at this time and I usually use about 5-7 minutes on a smoke. I waited for about 5 minutes, but when the light failed to appear again I
went home.

I didn't think to much about it when there was no other reports in newspapers etc. I had only had 1 beer that evening as I had been lending a hand
during a tv-recording at the student community, and had to get up early the next morning. Had it not been for the fact that the light was clearly
visible below clouds I'd probably guessed it to be a satelite or high flying plane reflecting the sun or something like that, but it was undoubtably
not that high. (The cloud probably being at about 3000 feet.. (measured in regards to the Graakallen.) The weather at the time was quite crisp, about
5 degrees centigrade below freezing.

Trondheim being a quite large city, with the accompanying light pollution the light was obviously quite bright, since it was brighter that for
instance the road illumination on the opposite side of the river valley. (Trondheim being situated along the Nidelven river, where this exits a
glacial valley into the sea) I was located at the lower part of the eastern side of the valley. Hope the sighting might be of interest to you. I've
seen lights i couldn't identify before, but this somehow seemed different. And I must beg your apology, feeling that the report might have been more
precise had I made a written record of it the same evening.

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